Hedgerow Gin: How to Make Your Own

I just came across something that caused my ears to prick and get my research gears cranking: Hedgerow Gin. With roots in the British Isles, Hedgerow Gin is a means to preserve the fall’s wild fruit bounty by producing a liqueur for the next year. I was filled with mental images of long hedgerows in the English countryside on a misty fall morning, with the light being ‘just so’, highlighting the changing colors of the season. I knew I needed to learn more and make a batch myself.

There is not a lot written about Hedgerow Gin. I suspect from the little I did find that it is more of a naturally practiced art and one people just know about how to make it rather than one requiring a recipe and tons of background. It seems to be a close relative of ‘Sloe Gin’ which you’ve undoubtedly heard about, though is quite different than the version sold in liquor stores. Sloe gin uses ‘sloes’, a small berry-like fruit which is actually in the plum family. They are combined with gin and sugar and left to sit to make a liqueur.

Hedgerow Gin casts a wider net, often using sloes but only as part of a broader group of fruits found on hedges in the wild. Wild damson plums, bullaces, elderberries, raspberries, blackberries, rosehips, and blueberries are some of the other fruits I’ve read about. The fruit content can be a sole hedgerow fruit or a mixture of your choosing, combined with gin and sugar.

Hedgerow Gin reminds me of Cherry Bounce which dates back in our American history to George Washington and is made with bourbon (though I’ve seen recipes with a variety of liquors), tart cherries and sugar. All these concoctions take mere moments to assemble and sit in a dark pantry awaiting their eventual liquid perfection. In the case of Hedgerow Gin it is suggested it sit for a year. One could imagine an era when seasons were accepted and revered, before the current mono-season of everything being available all the time, how putting by the fall fruits would be celebrated the next fall for what they’d become.

I may get some hand slapping from my British friends for this Yank version of Hedgerow Gin but I’ll chance it. As far as I’ve been able to learn Sloes and Wild Damson plums are not common in the U.S. and not in my area. I am combining raspberries (red and gold) I picked at a local farmette (from a hedgerow), local blackberries, some dried rosehips and Italian prune plums also from a local farm. The plums bear some similarity in shape and flesh tone to Damsons and I’m choosing to embrace the spirit of the drink with their addition in lieu of finding wild plums in my area.

Hedgerow Gin: How to Make Your Own

I am sharing the combination I made. Each batch of Hedgerow Gin is personal so I’d say use what is available in your area and what you fancy. I envy those you who can really go meandering about the hedgerows, putting together a wonderful wild blend!

Ingredients

Instructions

Place all ingredients in a wide mouth glass jar with sealing lid.

Turn the jar up and down weekly to disperse the sugar in the liquid. Place in a dark pantry or cupboard for a year. And if you can’t wait a year, taste it after 3 months and then decide if you are ready to drink it or leave it be! When ready to consume, pour liquid through a sieve or filter and retain the fruits to eat.

Nutrition Facts

Hedgerow Gin: How to Make Your Own

Amount Per Serving

Calories 249

% Daily Value*

Fat 0g0%

Saturated Fat 0g0%

Cholesterol 0mg0%

Sodium 1mg0%

Potassium 69mg2%

Carbohydrates 35g12%

Fiber 1g4%

Sugar 33g37%

Protein 0g0%

Vitamin A 85IU2%

Vitamin C 8.1mg10%

Calcium 7mg1%

Iron 0.2mg1%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Post Script. Following making this recipe and post I came upon a charming blog from the U.K. with wonderful recipes including Hedgerow Gin. I left the writer a comment and she responded with some information on Hedgerow Gin I wanted to share. To check out her blog, click here: Tarragon & Thyme.

“Hi Toni, have had a peep at your blog – you have the right idea about the Hedgerow Gin. You use what you have on hand. Before the days of supermarkets country people used to put up what they could in the pantry especially if they lived in the villages. These little tippies were often classed as medicinal but it was also part of something special for the festivities to hand to a guest or guests on a cold winter’s night. Soon invigorated the spirit and the soul. Country wines were also very much on the agenda, but in those days too people used to grow their own a lot more and often had a surplus which had to be used up in one way or another. Glad you liked my blog and look forward to you posting too. Take care and welcome, Pattypan”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

TONI DASH

Toni Dash, is the writer/blogger, photographer, recipe developer and creator of Boulder Locavore®. She has been developing easy to make, well-tested recipes since 2010. Her seasonal recipes bring excitement to the dining table for both gluten-free and gluten diners. Toni has been featured in numerous publications and on culinary websites for her creative, delicious recipes and travel features. For more details, check out herAbout page.

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Just a comment to make everyone’s life easier. There is need to cut fruit in half. You just need to “prick” it, so just a slit using a knife is fine. No need to take out the stones (pits) either. As for sloe gin, you make it when the soles are ripe, shake every day until the sugar is dissolved and it is ready to drink by Christmas, you don’t have to wait a year.

That fruit is lovely. I am thinking about Christmas presents and preserving fruit in this way (Sloe Gin and Cherry Bounce) for gifts in December. Thanks for sharing this recipe and your reverence to the seasons.

I'm not so familiar with “Hedgerow Gin” per se but I do look forward to my fall trips to the UK and tasting the yearly batches of damson and elderflower cordials that abound. Aw, you have me really homesick now! Even though I'm not a big gin lover, raspberry vodka is one of my favorite home brews.

Toni, I love this recipe! Gin is my kind of drink and this recipe reminds me of a “Rumtopf” (rum pot) my dad used to make. So instead of Gin he used rum. I prefer the gin. I have to ask my mom how long it had to sit. One year seams so long.Your pictures are gorgeous. I especially like the one with the sugar!

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